Christopher J. Date

Chris Date (born 1941) is an independent author, lecturer, researcher, and consultant, specializing in relational database theory.

Chris Date
Born1941 (age 7879)
NationalityUK
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
Occupationauthor, lecturer, researcher, and consultant, specializing in relational database theory
Employer(until 1983) IBM
Known forRelational database theory

Biography

Chris Date attended High Wycombe Royal Grammar School (U.K.) from 1951 to 1958 and received his BA in Mathematics from Cambridge University (U.K.) in 1962. He entered the computer business as a mathematical programmer at Leo Computers Ltd. (London), where he quickly moved into education and training. In 1966, he earned his master's degree at Cambridge, and, in 1967, he joined IBM Hursley (UK) as a computer programming instructor. Between 1969 and 1974, he was a principal instructor in IBM's European education program.

While working at IBM he was involved in technical planning and design for the IBM products SQL/DS and DB2. He was also involved with Edgar F. Codd’s relational model for database management. He left IBM in 1983 and has written extensively of the relational model, in association with Hugh Darwen.

His book An Introduction to Database Systems, currently in its 8th edition, has sold well over 700,000 copies[1] not counting translations, and is used by several hundred colleges and universities worldwide.

He is also the author of many other books on data management, most notably Databases, Types, and the Relational Model, subtitled and commonly referred to as The Third Manifesto, currently in its third edition (note that earlier editions were titled differently, but maintained the same subtitle), a proposal for the future direction of DBMSs.

Works

Chris Date is the author of several books, including:

  • An Introduction to Database Systems, ISBN 0-321-19784-4
  • A Guide to the SQL standard, 4th ed., Addison Wesley, USA 1997, ISBN 978-0-201-96426-4
  • Databases, Types, and the Relational Model, The Third Manifesto (with Hugh Darwen), ISBN 0-321-39942-0
  • Temporal Data & the Relational Model, ISBN 1-55860-855-9
  • Database in Depth: Relational Theory for Practitioners, ISBN 0-596-10012-4
  • Several volumes of Relational Database Writings: ISBN 0-201-39814-1, ISBN 0-201-82459-0, ISBN 0-201-54303-6, ISBN 0-201-50881-8.
  • What Not How: The Business Rules Approach to Application Development, ISBN 0-201-70850-7
  • The Database Relational Model: A Retrospective Review and Analysis, ISBN 0-201-61294-1
  • SQL and Relational Theory, 2nd Edition: How to Write Accurate SQL Code, ISBN 1-4493-1640-9.

In recent years he has published articles with Fabian Pascal at Database Debunkings.

gollark: I'm pretty sure you need more than a good-sounding goal to... be successful at things?
gollark: Well, money good because something something instrumental goals.
gollark: https://zerohplovecraft.wordpress.com/2018/05/11/the-gig-economy-2/
gollark: I'm running a full backup now, but I might try that.
gollark: As far as I could tell without being able to see what the screen said, yes.

See also

References

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